Dear Merla,
Where can I find The Compost Tea Digest 121?
Thanks
Zoran
Allan, do you know if this works with Amazon Canada or UK purchases? If you have an
account with Amazon U.S., it's the same account name/password for the other countries,
but I don't know if the purchase protocols carry over.
By the way, what will you do with all the money? Are there BD farms
Hey Gil, I am thinking that what this is, is a womb. The egg shape houses
life in Nature. The Romans and Egyptians went through a lot of hassle to
store their foods, wine, and water in urns, egg shaped vessels. They filled
the bowels of ships with these fragile containers for commerce and
In a message dated 11/29/02 8:31:36 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
maybe I'll get my deadened ass into gear and implement this
promise.
Great idea, bravo...sstorch
Title: FW: [globalnews] A Thanksgiving Day Letter from Michael Moore
November 27, 2002
A Thanksgiving Day Letter from Michael Moore
Dear Friends,
It is Thanksgiving 2002 and it would seem that there is little to give thanks for this year. W. has scored an unbelievable hat trick and is now
Try [EMAIL PROTECTED] or go to Yahoo.com and choose
groups, then join--choose a Yahoo ID and get a password. . There's
an archive on the Compost Tea page. It's by individual email, not by
Digest #s. Digest 121 is November 29. Hope this helps.
Merla
zoran wrote:
Dear Merla,
Where can I
Hi Steve,
You said urn. Do you mean an amphora that's rounded on the bottom but is a
vase or is this really an egg-shaped vessel and the lid is just the top of the
egg? Is yours out of Cone 06 Terra Cotta? I have a lot of red clay at Cone
6. It wouldn't be as porous. You want it unglazed and
By the way, what will you do with all the money? Are there BD farms
in the Caymans?
It's Funny, Nancy. Having been doing this so long, my needs for
financial support have been sort of a concise history of the
development of desktop technology. We've moved from needing more
diskettes, to
In a message dated 11/29/02 8:31:36 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
maybe I'll get my deadened ass into gear and implement this
promise.
Great idea, bravo...sstorch
The slow down has been out of deference to Hugh Courtney's strong
support of the bio/anthro reader. I have been hesitant to
Drawn from Jane's recent post for emphasis AB
In the meantime, you, me, all of us, have to get together and come
up with a plan that gets this country back in our hands. I have a
few ideas. I'll bet you do, too. Why don't we have an online
brainstorming session from now through the holidays?
Dear Jane Sherry,
Greetings and thank you for sending this to BDNow.
Where did it originate from?
Jane Parker
Title: FW: [globalnews] UN: Soil's Tiniest Organisms Could Solve Huge Problems
Environment News Service
Soil's Tiniest Organisms Could Solve Huge Problems
NAIROBI, Kenya, November 29, 2002 (ENS) - There is a wealth of new species under our feet awaiting discovery, especially in the still
Title: Re: (was Brainstorming with Michael Moore) GlobalNews Sub Info)
Jane, You are new to the list, so forgive me the others who have now seen this post a half dozen times. My husband, Curtis Lang runs a mailing list. I often forward posts from his GlobalNews list to this list. You have the
Title: Re: (was Brainstorming with Michael Moore) GlobalNews Sub Info)
Jane,
I am new to this list. Thank you for posting this
subscribing information!
Dee
Calling it the largest source of untapped life left on Earth, the
UN Environment Programme (UNEP) has announced a new $26 million
project to understand and utilize the life forms underground.
Another example of Rome building a church on the site of one of our temples?
To learn about the soil
Tony: Our rule here is no chooks in the veggie patch ever.
Sorry to confuse - I meant that chickens are a useful stage in preparing new
ground or working over beds which have already been harvested. I once
fantasised about offering a garden makeover service using a succession of
animals -
Source info below. In the meantime, how many of these have you read??
The Next Green Revolution: Essential Steps to a Healthy, Sustainable
Agriculture by James E. Horne and Maura McDermott, Food Products
Press, ISBN: 1560228865, 2002
* Agroecology; the Scientific Basis of Alternative
on 30/11/02 6:23 AM, Merla Barberie at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I just need to start from square one and learn how to
douse. Those of us who are neophytes need to start at square one to
understand
what Gil and Hugh and many others know by experience.
There are so many things to learn.
I thought I'd just come back to lurk n learn. But alas, I have to let
ya'll know I'm back.(Thanks, Allan, by the way for resubbing me.)
A LOT has gone on in the year or so I've been away. Heart surgery
for one thing, (why didn't they do this 20 years ago???) I feel about
20 years
19 matches
Mail list logo